Gun rights activist Adam Kokesh to stay in jail after refusing to speak to judge

During a Thursday morning arraignment hearing outside of Washington, DC, jailed activist Adam Kokesh refused to answer questions from a judge and was told that he’ll continue to be locked up without bond.

Kokesh, 31, will likely now stay in a northern Virginia detention
facility until a preliminary hearing scheduled for October 2 is
held. He was arrested Tuesday evening at his Herndon, Virginia
home and charged with drug and gun felonies.

The raid on Kokesh’s home occurred amid a US Park Police
investigation which was brought on by a video that the Second
Amendment activist posted on YouTube a week earlier.

In the clip, Kokesh is seen loading a shotgun in downtown DC’s
Freedom Plaza - located just two blocks away from the White
House.

“We will not be silent. We will not obey. We will not allow
our government to destroy our humanity,” Kokesh said in the
clip, which was recorded after his planned “Open Carry March” was
cancelled amid warnings from law enforcement. "We are the
final American Revolution. See you next Independence Day," he
continued.

Kokesh hoped to have hundreds, perhaps thousands, of residents
walk into the nation’s capital carrying loaded firearms in
defiance of the district’s ban on guns outside the home.

After police concluded a search of Kokesh’s Herndon, VA house on
Monday, they charged him with possession of a Schedule I or
Schedule II narcotic, namely psychadelic mushrooms, and also
having drugs while possessing a firearm. If convicted on that
count alone, he would receive a minimum sentence of two years in
jail.

Kokesh was scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday, but reportedly
refused to leave his holding cell. He finally made his appearance
before a judge the following morning, but had to be carted in on
a wheelchair because he refused to cooperate.

"He happened to be in a wheeled chair because he did not want
to walk," First Lieutenant Steve Elbert of the Fairfax County
Sheriff's Office told WTOP News.

When he was wheeled before a judge to be arraigned, Kokesh
reportedly refused to speak.

"I'll take your silence as your consent," a Fairfax County
judge told him, according to WJLA News.

A friend of Kokesh told News4 Washington that refusing to leave
the jail cell was meant to be an act of civil disobedience. The
Sheriff's Office previously confirmed that Kokesh initially
refused to be photographed or fingerprinted upon being detained.

Kokesh has been arrested in the past, including earlier this year
at a marijuana legalization rally in Philadelphia and at a
dance-off he hosted inside the Jefferson Memorial in DC two years
ago. He told News4 last week that the YouTube video that sparked
a police investigation was also an act of civil disobedience.

“I loaded a shotgun on Independence Day, but I didn't kill
anybody. I didn't drone any children," Kokesh said. "I
didn't steal any children's future. I didn't sell this country
into debt. I didn't do any of the crimes that the man two blocks
over at the White House is responsible for."